Practically each main media outlet is refusing to signal a pledge crafted by Protection Secretary Pete Hegseth that will require Pentagon reporters to agree to not publish “unauthorized” materials—successfully prohibiting journalists from publishing something until the Trump administration okays it first.
Hegseth despatched reporters a loyalty pledge three weeks in the past and gave them till Tuesday to signal his authoritarian oath to not report something he would not approve of. If reporters didn’t signal, Hegseth warned they might lose their media credentials on the Pentagon.
Reporters who refused to signal mentioned that they’ve by no means been capable of roam willy-nilly across the Pentagon, as Hegseth accused them of doing. And so they mentioned his pledge would flip them into mouthpieces, gagging them from reporting on data the general public deserves.
“Today, NPR will lose access to the Pentagon because we will not sign an unprecedented Defense Department document, which warns that journalists may lose their press credentials for ‘soliciting’ even unclassified information from federal employees that has not been officially approved for release,” NPR Pentagon correspondent Tom Bowman wrote in an op-ed. “That policy prevents us from doing our job. Signing that document would make us stenographers parroting press releases, not watchdogs holding government officials accountable.”
Hegseth, for his half, is obsessive about leaks following a number of reviews of his incompetence, together with when he was caught in a scandal earlier this yr discussing labeled warfare planning data on an unsecure Sign chat.
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In April, he even threatened to provide his workers polygraph assessments to cease leaks from inside his division.
However because the reviews of his chaotic reign of terror proceed, Hegseth is now concentrating on the media shops who dare to report the leaked data. It’s a determined try and cease the articles that precisely report on his ineptitude.
Finally, that is the primary time that media organizations are literally banding collectively to face as much as the Trump regime’s authoritarian efforts to silence anybody who dares to report info that make the administration look dangerous.
Not like the White Home press corps, which has allowed Trump to ban shops who report issues he doesn’t like from briefings and journeys, the Pentagon press corps has collectively determined to struggle again towards the administration’s trampling of their First Modification rights.
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“Our members did nothing to create this disturbing situation,” the Pentagon Press Affiliation wrote Monday in a press release. “It arises from an entirely one-sided move by Pentagon officials apparently intent upon cutting the American public off from information they do not control and pre-approve—information concerning such issues as sexual assault in the military, conflicts of interest, corruption, or waste and fraud in billion-dollar programs.”
“There is simply no need for this battle,” the PPA continued. “The Pentagon has no reason for the new acknowledgement other than to chill both reporters and their sources—something many of our members cannot abide.”
Memo the mainstream media: Extra of this, please.